Susan’s Almanac Project for January 14, 2019

By |2019-01-14T14:35:10+00:00January 14th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Yukio Mishima (b. 1925-1970), who is possibly the most important Japanese novelist of his century and who died in a far more dramatic way than any of us can hope to achieve. Seriously. Don’t even try. Mishima was born Hiraoka Kimitake in Tokyo to a government official and his wife, but [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 11, 2019

By |2019-01-11T15:49:21+00:00January 11th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Diana Gabaldon (b. 1952), one of today’s most popular authors in the historical fiction-science fiction-fantasy-adventure-mystery-romance (HFSFFAMR) genre and whose Outlander novels have sold more than 28 million copies. Gabaldon (known as “Herself” to her fans at Comic Con) was born in Scottsdale, Arizona, and grew up in Flagstaff, Arizona, telling stories [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 10, 2010

By |2019-01-10T18:59:38+00:00January 10th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of the early 20th century poet Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962), whose philosophy can be summed up as pro-nature, anti-humanity, resonating (however unintentionally) with a later 20th century thinker who said, “People. They’re the worst” (Jerry Seinfeld). Jeffers was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, and received a crazy-good education in classics and the Bible, due [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 9, 2019

By |2019-01-09T15:32:26+00:00January 9th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Judith Krantz (b. 1927 or 1928, sources disagree), whose salacious romance novels based on S&S (sex and shopping) have sold a respectable 80-plus million copies in 50-plus languages, and whose best-known titles probably include Scruples (1978) and Princess Daisy (1980). You will not find her next to Jane Austen or George [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 8, 2019

By |2019-01-08T14:59:27+00:00January 8th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Victorian author Wilkie Collins (1824-1889), whose novel The Moonstone (1868) is considered by some to be the greatest English detective story ever written and whose popularity in his day was exceeded only by that of Charles Dickens. If you google Collins’ image, you will see that he has the high, prominent, [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 7, 2019

By |2019-01-07T13:52:30+00:00January 7th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960), a member of the Harlem Renaissance who is best known today for her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), and the good news is that if you have always wanted to read a description of what untreated rabies does to a human being, then look no [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 4, 2019

By |2019-01-04T14:50:18+00:00January 4th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of comedian and bestselling author Andy Borowitz (b. 1958), who has been called one of the funniest people in America and who wrote an article officially acknowledged as one of the funniest pieces ever published in the New Yorker, “Emily Dickinson, Jerk of Amherst” (Nov. 16, 1998). Borowitz was born and raised [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 3, 2019

By |2019-01-03T15:56:20+00:00January 3rd, 2019|

It’s the birthday of poet Anne Stevenson (b. 1933), about whose distinctive style it has been said, “Reading her, one is seldom if ever reminded of any other poets” (X. J. Kennedy). Stevenson was born in Cambridge, England, but mostly grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts, New Haven, Connecticut, and Ann Arbor, Michigan, depending on where [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for January 2, 2019

By |2019-01-02T14:48:17+00:00January 2nd, 2019|

It’s the birthday of critically acclaimed novelist and short story author Leonard Michaels (1933-2003), an author who evidently ranks right up there with the greatest writers you’ve never heard of. (I think. I’d never heard of him.) Michaels is known for writing about ordinary characters in bizarre and extreme situations and has been compared to [...]

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